A is the answer to ur question
in Joy Harjo's "New Orleans", the line "beaten silver paths" refers to the streets of such city. She remembers of certain Spanish conqueror, De Soto,who came to this lands searching for, and constantly states that he wouldn't find it here. Maybe is a mock to that fact.
The "silver blades and crosses" refers to the sword and crucifix of the conqueror, who drawn in the Mississippi river which dreamt of those items. Maybe this means that the streets of New Orleans were made of the things and dreams of the many conquerors who came to that land in search for gold and failed.
Answer:
They show that Nora goes from playing happily with her children to being startled by Krogstad, an unwelcome visitor. They show that Nora, the children, and Krogstad are on the stage at the same time and are communicating with one another. They show that Nora has to take care of her children without the help of her husband, Torvald, and resents it greatly. They show that Krogstad is familiar to the family and is a frequent visitor, so he can walk in without
Explanation:
The correct answers are B and C.
B- Senesh was a poet and a playwright. She wrote in both Hungarian and Hebrew. Her better known poem is "A Walk to Caesarea", commonly known as Eli, Eli ("My God, My God").
C- Senesh was a parachutist during World War II. She was due to assist in the rescue of Hungarian Jews about to be deported to Auschwitz when she was arrested at the Hungarian border. She was imprisoned and tortured and, when the Nazis realised she was not going to give them any information, she was executed by firing squad.
A sonnet is a 14-line poem that rhymes in a pattern:
A - B - A - B - C - D - C - D - E - F - E - F - G - G
If the poem you're talking about meets these criteria, it is then classified as a sonnet.